The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953, April 30, 1891, Image 5

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    THE TELEPHONE-REGISTER
M c M innville ,
April
•
...
O regon .
30, 1891.
WHICH ARE BEST LIKED?
ARE
MEN MOST ATTRACTED
DEMONSTRATIVE WOMEN!
BY
Old Time Young Ladle» and the Girl of the
Period — My
Friend and My
Friend'»
Daughter—The Girl lias to Offer Iler-
eelf If MlMle Is Right.
[Copyright, 1801, by American Press Associa­
tion.]
I was extremely amused one day, when
■itting with a mother and daughter
whom I rank among my dear friends, at
a little bit of cynicism that camo from
the fresh young lips of the girl. Her
mother, whose ideas ami practice are
largely based upon the innocence of
Eden, was reproving her daughter for
having been, as she fancied, a little too
forward in accepting a young man’s at­
tentions and an invitation to ride with
him, and finally, with a tremendous as­
sumption of worldly wisdom, she said:
“It is a great mistake girls are making
nowadays in being so accessible. Men
don’t value them half so much, or try
half so hard to please them, for they see
that they can please without trying, so
why should they trouble themselves? If
a girl is cold and reserved and draws
bock, the men will be piqued into pur­
suit and exertion.”
“Bravo, little mamma!” cried the
saucy daughter, clapping her hands
and glancing at me, while, I am ashamed
to say, I joined in her merriment.
“You have at last asserted your position
as the 'cruel parient’ and administered a
crushing rebuke to your rebellious child!
Bread and water, a locked cell, and per­
haps salutary chastisement must soon
follow unless I reform. But, darling
little mother, while you have been con­
cocting all that worldly wisdom the
world has moved on, and nous «irons
change tout cela"-----
“Who's ‘nousf ” interrupted my
friend. “The man or the woman?’
“The man first—on the lead, as it
were”-----
“Slang!”
“Yes, dear, ‘just a little one,’ you
know! But if the lords of creation take
the lead what can we docile and sub­
missive inferior creatures do but follow?
I'm sure that's good orthodox doctrine.”
“Well, but over what course are they
on the lead?’ interposed I, anxious to get
at the girl’s theory.
“Why, they don’t like the delicate re­
serve and chilly dignity which mamma
says was the favorite bait in her young
days.”
“My daughter!”
“Oh, you didn't say bait, did you, 'tite
mammanf Well, the men don’t pursue
and seek and all the rest of it worth a
cent in these days, and a girl who under­
takes those tactics is just left to enjoy
her own chilly dignity in her own cold
corner. In fact she’s left out in the cold
altogether.”
“Then the men like demonstrative
women better than modest maidens, do
they?’ asked my friend a little tartly,
for few mothers like to be laughed at as
old fashioned by their own daughters.
The girl, too, was just a little touched,
and replied more seriously:
“Oh, if you say ‘modest,’ that’s quite
another thing! I fancy we’re quite as
modeet as the ‘prunes, prisms and pro­
priety’ maidens, as you call them, of the
last generation, but we're a heap jol-
¡jer"___
“Oh, child!”
“Yes, mamma, but what I want to
convince yon of is that men have grown
at once lazier and more requiring than
they were in your young days. They
expect the girls to come quite half way
to meet them, and if we don't they just
turn to some one who will.”
“In fact, they lie under the tree and
open their months waiting for the plums
to drop in,” suggested I, and my little
friend replied with a sagacious nod:
“Exactly so, although a good many of
them won’t take the trouble to open
their mouths; they expect the plum to
come and bump them open!”
“And the plums are willing to accept
the situation, are they?’ demanded her
mother scornfully.
“Well, they don't want to wither on
the tree,” airily replied Missie with a
gleeful glance at me.
Driving borne I revolved the qnestion
in my own mind, Was Missie right, or
was her mother? And I think I con­
cluded that the girl was correct as to
facts and the mother as to theory.
Certainly the ideal relation of man and
maid is for her to smile swestly from a
balcony, and he to risk his neck in
climbing up to her—“the dear idea
where she flies pursues”—the knight,
after making humble protestations of
his fealty, is put upon probation, and
travels the world around to prove him­
self worthy, never turning so much as
the “tail of his eye” upon any other
beauty, and coming back after seven
years or so to receive his reward. Jacob
served fourteen years for Rachel, and, as
the Good Book tells us, thought it a
mere trifle compared with his love for
her.
But Jacobs are scarce in these days,
and knights are generally more errant
than faithful. A Penelope who sent her
Ulysses away to seek fame and wealth
in these days might knit and ravel a
great many tidies before she would wel­
come him back, and he would never re­
sist Circe.
I don’t know why it is, but it • is a
painful truth that women are not wooed
in these days so earnestly as they used
to be, and are won much more easily.
Is it because there are so many more
of them in proportion to the men, or be­
cause they expect so much more when it
comes to a question of marriage?
Or is it that as our country grows older
we are falling into the customs of those
more mature civilizations where mar­
riage is a business affair, and the parents
of a young lady offer a bonus to the
bridegroom who will assume her main­
tenance? If that is the case, perhaps
it will be better to copy the whole
process and allow the parents on both
sides to arrange the little affair before
the principals come into the field. Un­
der the present system—that is, if Mis-
aie’s jests had any foundation of truth—
the girl is expected to make bar own
bargain, and if she has not a large fort­
une to offer as an attraction she is to
exhibit her own attractiveness not only
In ail purely feminine ways, but in im­
itating and appropriating those manly
fashions that used to be held peculiar to
the coarser sex. I say, if Missies jests
were serious this would be pretty near
their meaning, but we will hope they
were only the extravaganzas of a gay
young girl, and hope that the “happy
middling” between her own and her
mother's schemes of salvation remain.-,
the trnth both as to theory and practice.
But, after all, do men beet love a de­
monstrative or a cold woman? We have
always been told that the latter is the
case, but as one looks around a ballroom,
for instance, or a reception, or any col­
lection of young people where there is
liberty of movement and choice, which
class of girls and young women do we
see most surrounded, most often upon
the floor, invited to the box seat of the
drag or the stern seat in the boat- Is it
the fair white statue of a girl who sel­
dom opens her mouth and only faintly
stirs its classic lines in a smile? She
whose clear blue eyes seem as tar away
and passionless as the sky, and whose
fingers rest upon yours as cqldly and
lightly as the petals of a water lily? Or
is it the gay, laughter loving,-curly, pink
cheeked little thing whose fresh lips are
always parted to show teeth like the
grains upon an ear of white corn, an«}
whose rose tipped fingers close in a co­
quettish grasp upon those of her cava­
lier, while she half whispers some
drollery into his ear? Or is it the
gushing girl who taps her foot upon
the floor and cries: “Oh, this music
makes me wild! If you don't ask
me to dance this very minute I'll go by
myself:” or who exclaims in infantile
sincerity, “Oh, please let me sit on the
box seat and drive just a little tiny bit
of the way!” or, perhaps: “Let me light
your cigarette, do! I so love to get a
whiff of nice tobacco, and—won’t you
tell? Mind, never, never, never! Well, I
do sometimes steal one out of my broth­
er’s room, and go away by myself and
smoke it.” And then she allows herself
to be persuaded to take one now, and
smokes it with much aplomb and no ill
results.
.
Now which of these is the most suc­
cessful girl of our period? Which is the
one the men like the best?
I asked three of the men of my ac­
quaintance. The first inanely replied,
“The one who is most like you,” to
which I retorted:
“Neither one is like me or ever was. I
was brought up in the old fashioned
way—under my parents’ wing—and was
simply a jcnne fille when they married
me.”
The next man said: “I like them all; I
admire pretty girls of all sorts ami con­
ditions. and the ono I am with at the
moment is the best one.”
The third expert replied: “I can only
answer you by confessing the theory I
have slowly built up out of my own ex­
perience. A man is not so constituted
as to be satisfied with one woman; he
needs a different companion at different
epochs of his life, or even in the differ­
ent moods of each epoch. That is the
reason I have never married. How can
I tell that the calm, chilly and unap­
proachable woman who just now is my
delight would please me ten years hence?
Or if I sacrifice the present taste to the
future necessity, how can I tell what
sort of woman I shall prefer in ten
years? It is really a most harassing
question.”
“I don’t see how you can settle it ex­
cept by going to Utah,” said I, sympa­
thetically.
“True. I have considered the subject
most seriously, but there are certain im­
pediments. A man may have many ob­
jects of admiration, but I don’t believe
he'd be very comfortable with more than
one wife. Both taste and reason, or
rather instinct, lead me always to be off
with the old love before I am on with
the new, and I shudder at the thought
of being permanently fettered to any of
the past objects of my fancy. I am al­
ready tired of them, and if I could not
get away should soon loathe the dear
creatures. Besides, I doubt if the stately
garden lily which just now is the flower
of my fancy grows in Utah. Her pure
white petals would shrink from the at­
mosphere.”
“Then you prefer an undemonstrative
woman!” exclaimed I, eagerly.
“I do to-day,” was the reply.
Not satisfied with these researches I
pursued them further, until I became a
perfect Sphynx, propounding my conun­
drum to all comers, and never finding
the Edipus who coubl solve it satisfac­
torily until, after consulting many men
and some women, and making my own
observations at all sorts of times and
places, I came to the conclusion that the
question is too complicated to be settled
by a yes or a no, or, indeed, by any posi­
tive and dogmatic reply.
My cynical friend's confession that at
different times he liked different styles
of women, and no one style satisfied him,
might be truthfully echoed by three-quar­
ters of his sex. As a general thing a
very young man setting out in life with
some sort of ideal in his mind, not gen­
erally copied from his sisters, finds it
most nearly realized in the statuesque and
garden lily style of girl. He doer not know
much about her, for she says so little
and looks so little and does so little
that she remains inscrutable, but his
fancy invests her with all sorts of lofty
perfections of mind and heart, and if he
fails to rouse her sympathy or emotions
he meekly concludes that he is so far l>e-
neath her level that she cannot descend
to his feelings.
This kind of Endymion fancy for the
moon does not generally terminate in
marriage, or, if it does, sad is Endymion's
waking when he discovers that his god­
dess is only moonshine and his wife is a
cold, hard, narrow woman who does not
show emotion of any sort, simply be­
cause she does not feel any, and does not
even know her own deficiencies.
But instead of marrying, the lover
generally drifts off by slow degrees
into a warmer atmosphere, ami seek­
ing sympathy, falls in love with
an Irrepressible, whose heart is broken
into a thousand pieces because his
dear, charming dog is dead or his
yacht was beaten, and who is perfectly
delighted, “simply charmed,” at the de­
vice of his new walking stick. If he
loses his grandmother or maiden annt
she appears in a gentle shade of lavender
or violet, and explains that she couldn’t
put on a bright dress when her dear
friend was in such sorrow. Perhaps she
writes him a little note and puts in a
pansy or two as a delicate tribute to his
somber feelings. She is sure to tell him
that it is quite a trial to her to be of so
sympathetic a nature; that she just lives
in the lives of her friends, and feels
their sorrows far more keenly than she
could her own, etc.
But honey, although very nice, be­
comes cloying if taken too freely, and
Coelebs in search of a wife is presently
found at the feet, or rather at the elbow,
of a nice, practical, common sense sort
of girl, who not only calls a spade a
spade, but seems to love to talk about it,
even though contrary to the prejudices
of polite society.
Next, by natural revulsion, comes the
dainty little creature born in the roses
and fed on the lilies of life, and so on,
and so on, for the variety is infinite, and
so are the tastes and needs of men, ami
if I have not succeeded in telling you
whether they prefer the demonstrative
or the quiet ones, it is because they can­
not themselves tell, but, as my friend of
catholic tastes averred, they “love every
sort of a girl at one time or another, and
not any one sort at all times.”
At the battle of Dresden in 1813 the
weather, which had been serene and very
warm, suddenly changed. Vast clouds
filled the sky, and soon a torrent of rain
fell.
The mines along the Union Pacific rail­
way now produce over 1,400,000 tons of coal
annually, and the owners are preparing
for a much larger output.
The Prince of Wales has a fine collection
of tobacco pipes, and though the cigarette
is his favorite smoke, he is still an ardent
pipe collector.
St. Louis now has ten electric street rail­
ways in actual operation. Of the total
number, one is of t he Short system, six are
Thomson-Houston and three Sprague.
M. Bardin, of Joinville-le-Pont, near
Paris, is said to have 2,000,000 geese, which
produce annually 20,000,000 of quills. He
has the largest quill manufactory in the
world
Tlic Fashions of Paris.
There is something to suit every one
in the spring modes this season. For'
the tall and slender figure is the pannier, j
which adds so much grace and round-I
ness of outline, and it is now a fixed j
fact. A beautiful design in this style
was an afternoon robe made of cream
colored china silk figured with tiny rose­
buds and brown surah. The front was
made of the china silk, gathered on in a
Spanish flounce, and the corsage draped
V shaped of the same. The princess
back was of the surah. The panels had
a band of Honiton lace laid backward,
and in front there were flots of brown
velvet ribbon.
Another very handsome mode for a
reception or dinner dress for ladies who
do not wish to go decollete is of lilac
faille, with a plain skirt slightly draped
and trained, and a Louis XV coat of deep
LILAC FAILLE AND PANNIER ROBE.
heliotrope velvet embroidered richly in
lighter shade. The front is open, with a
drapery of faille on the left side, and a
deep jabot of cream white chiffon is
worn with it. The sleeves are of velvet,
with caps of faille held up in the center
with bows of velvet. A Marie Stuart
collar, with a high crepe lisse ruching,
finishes the neck.
A glimpse of some of the midsummer
gowns now being made show a decided
preference for soft mulls, silk chiffon
and a very delicate material of silk and
wool called barege. This is sometimes
in self colors, and as often figured with
small flowers or polka dots. It drapes
like fine chailie, but is more transparent.
Grenadine in every imaginable variety
is seen, white, black and colored. Some
of the white is made up over slips of col­
ored silk, and tho effect is delicately
beautiful. The black is made up over
scarlet or yellow or some other color
with excellent taste. For those of
quieter fancy slips of glace silk are worn
under the black grenadines. Russian
net will be worn to some extent, and so
will the Spanish and Chantilly flounc-
ings, but the real fin de siecle is grena­
dine or barege.
Cheap Dress Goods.
It is astonishing how cheap certain
lines of dress goods are in New York this
year. In the first place there is the all
wool Henrietta, which can be bought in
all the fashionable colors at about fifty
cents a yard, forty-four inches wide;
serges, in stripes and plain, at from forty-
five to sixty-five cents; homespuns,
from thirty cents up; shepherd checks
and light weight cheviot, from fifty
cents, and a plainer quality, which is
part cotton, from twenty-five cents up.
Double width cashmeres, all wool, in
fairly good quality, can be bought for
from forty-nine cents to sixty cents per
yard, and numbers of styles of outing
cloths and veilings and colored flannels
sell as low as fifteen cents a yard. The
very finest quality of French sateens is
thirty-five cents a yard, and it needs ten
yards for a dress, with about one dol­
lar's worth of ribbon for trimming,
which is cheap for such a handsome
gown as sateen makes. There are sev­
eral kinds of alpaca and crystalettc,
which cost fifty cents, and a dress of
this, aside from linings, is but $5. Clot­
ton goods cost from four cents to twenty-
five cents per yird, and make very
pretty gowns, which are decidedly the
fashion for people of the highest posi­
tion, and when these are made every­
thing is done anil finished as if thfy
were silk gowns, so that they are realiy
elegant. ________________
OLDEST TWINS LIVING.
Sliters Eighty-seven Years OI<1 Who Can
Scarcely Be Told Apart.
St. Cloud, Minn., boasts the oldest living
pair of twins in the country. Rosina and
Crescentia Sutterlee were born in Zell
Baden, Germany, Feb. 22,1804. Crescentlp
was married in 1835 to John Fritz, at their
home, and in the year 1848, together with
her husband and only son, Andrew Fritz,
now a prosperous and highly respected
citizen of St. Cloud, immigrated to Amer­
ica and removed to Sandusky, O., where
they resided until 1857.
From there they went to Minnesota, lo­
cating at St. Paul, and in 1861 removed to
their present home, which is still her
home. Rosina, the other twin sister, was
married to Edward Sweth in 1831. Five
children were born to this couple, all of
whom have since died—three in Germany,
the other two in this country. Her hus
band died in Germany, and as a widow she
came to this country in 1S68, residing with
her son-in-law, Henry Koester, ever since.
The parents of the two women both
reached the age of nearly nipety years, and
present indications would predict a longer
lifetime for tho twins than that of their
parents.
The resemblance in appearance of the
pair is so great that many times intimate
friends, who have known them since their
residence here, have been deceived in their
identity. Rosina has often been mis­
taken for her sister. At a time the latter
needed medical treatment and called in the
doctor, who was a friend of her sister,
and when she became convalescent she
asked the doctor for her bill. He answered
that on account of the many favors shown
in business relations he wouldn’t charge a
eent, not knowing that she was not the
sister he referred to.
Upon one occasion John Fritz, a grand­
son of Crescentia, who operates a photo
graph gallery here, induced the twin sisters
to make a sitting for their photographs.
When the picture was finished and shown
to them they simultaneously spoke up, say­
ing, “Which of the two am I?”
The grandchildren of Crescentia, of
whom nine are living, have many times
failed to identify their grandmother when
in company with her sister except by
their dress. They usually dressed alike.
Rosina attends early mass in the Catholic
church every morning, and her sister, who
lives one and one-half miles from the
church, attends frequently during the sum­
mer months, making the distance there
and back on foot. The memory of the two
aged ladies is good, especially that of Ro-
sina.
Crescentia about two years ago discarded
spectacles, which she had worn for many
years, and since reads the newspapers and
her prayer book without the aid of glasses.
On bright days she can see the chapel on
the so called Calvary Mount, nearly two
miles distant from her residence. The two
stand each about five feet four inches in
height, and Crescentia weighs 235, while
Rosina only balances the scales at 233
pounds. They have both been widows for
many years, neither marrying after the
death of her first husband.—Chicago Her­
ald.
________________
G. Washington Coon (purchasing suit of
clothes)—1’se ’fraid, sah, dat dhese trousers
am ’bout to’ sizes too big to’ me.
Cohen—But dot was English, mine friend!
G. Washington Coon—Mebbe, sah; but it
’pears to me dat my complexion don’t go
very well wif dat Anglo-maniac craze.—
Puck.
ODDS AND ENDS.
Administrator's Notice.
- I
New York, Paris and Berlin all together '
have not so large an area as London.
Never offer to go to tho room of an in- j
valid upon whom you have called, but I
wait for an invitation to do so.
It has been calculated that a bee must |
suck 218,750 flowers for every ounce of
honey gathered.
Laugh and the world laughs with you
doesn’t always hold good when you laugh
too heartily at your own story.
True friendship consists of knowing a
man’s very soul and keeping what you
know to yourself.
After a Buffalo fire a case of lamp chim­
neys that had come down from the third
story were found unbroken.
To complete their growth the nails of
the left hand require eight to ten days
more than those of the right.
The income of Lord Revelstoke, the head
of the house of Baring, will not in future
exceed £3,000 a year. It was once more
than £40,000.
Some of the working girls’ clubs are dis­
cussing the advisability of joining a build­
ing association and owning their own club
houses.
Diluted alcohol and thorough shampoo­
ing will remove the stain from your hair.
Do not use brass hairpins; small silver or
shell pins are not costly and will not stain
the hair.
A fourtecn-year-ol<l girl who was sworn
as a witness in a Camden (N. J.) murder
case said she had never seen a Bible before
she entered the court room.
A German prescription for preventing
cold sores and boils from coming to a head
is to paint them five to ten times daily
with equal parts of boracic acid and water.
The United States has now become the
greatest iron producing nation in the world,
having produced 9,202,703 gross tons in
1890, against 8,000,000 produced in Great
Britain.
The Hungarian government favors a
scheme for an electric railway between
Vienna and Buda Pesth, a distance of 150
miles, to run single cars every ten minutes,
like a street service, in two hours and a
half.
Wash the feet every day with, soap and
water anti wipe them perfectly dry on
every part, particularly between the toes.
A good hard rubbing with a coarse towel
will tend to keep the skin healthy.
According to a recently published polit­
ical encyclopedia, there are only three
states in the Union—Massachusetts, Con­
necticut and Rhode Island—in which it is
required that voters shall be able to read
and write.
Love’s Fond IIopc Blasted.
The tender, budlike hopes of a Lewiston
youth who lias been dreaming the first few
winks of love’s young dream are crushed,
and he sometimes thinks that he never will
recover, but we think he will.
He has been keeping a young lady in
Raymond up nights a good deal lately, and
she has been reciprocating the attachment.
The only party to the affair who was not
warmly and deeply in earnest was the
young lady’s father, and for some reason
or other he didn’t seem to warm up a bit
and didn’t seem to pay much attention to
it one way or the other. The Lewiston
young man has been over there a good
deal, his disease of the heart keeping him
restless at home. Now and then he has
hitched up the horse of his fatlier-iu-law-
never-to be and has taken his girl out to
drive in the sober moonlight, and by a ju­
dicious care in getting the sleigh out noise­
lessly he has finally learned how to evade
suspicion and drive with one hand at the
same time.
A large, mellow night came along and
stopped at that town very recently, and
the young man was caracoling the old
man's horse over the hills gayly. Coming
back he committed a great error. He tied
the horse with a slip noose. The horse did
not die. He was discovered before death
had claimed him for his own, but he was
almost moribund and the flash that had
erstwhile l>een in his eye had flashed out.
He was a depressed beast.
The old gentleman made no charge for
the extra kerosene, coal and wood that had
been consumed in the front parlor, but he
says that a young man with such a danger
ous familiarity with slipknots can’t have
his girl, and the match is off.—Lewiston
Journal. _________________
—VIA—
ADDITION
ARE SELLING FAST!
It
SvLild.izxg'
Is
Tip.
Soon Lots will be scarce and Command a Higher Price,
The Only Sign Writer in the County.
Remember Paper Hanging and Inside Fur­
nishing a Specialty.
Work taken by Contract or by the Day. Ex­
perienced men employed.
Third Street, McMinnville, Oregon.
1
'Tl “U*
II. llullctt
”
Snug little fortunes have been made at
work for us, by Anna Page, Austin,
Texas, and Jno. Bonn, Toledo, Ohio.
See cut. Others are doing as well. Why
Mot you? Some earn over $500.00 n
month. You cun do the work and live
|at home, wherever you are. Even be­
ginners nrc easily earning from $5 to
$10adny. All ages. We show you how
and start you. Can work in spare time
or all the time. Big money for work­
ers. Failure unknown among them.
NEW and wonderfùl. Particulars fre«»
Co., Rox WHO I”t»rtlun<i, Maine
Chleheater'a Ensilah Diamond Brand.
ENNYROYAL PILLS
P
Original and Only Genuine.
A
always reliable. ladies ask ^K\
Druggist for CkicAester's JBuUsk
wtond Brand in Bed and Gold metallic
xea. sealed with blue ribbon. Take
o other. Rtfute dangerout «ubetitu- v
tions and imitation». At Druggists, or send 4*.
In stamps for particulars, testimonials and
“Relief for Ladiea,” in inter, by return
f Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Name Paper.
Chieheater Chemical Co.,Madiaon Square,
Sold by all Local Druggists.
FhlLada., l*m
-¿Sk-'V
safe ,
SHASTA LINE.
Express Tyains I-eave Portland Daily
ARRIVE.
____
LCAva.
Portland . 7 <s) p in .8anFranciscolO.15am
Han Fran. 9d)0 p m Portland
9.35
“
” am
Above trains stop only at following sta­
tions north of Roseburg: East Portland,
Oregon Citv, Woodburtn, Salem. Albany,
Tangent, Sfiedils, Halsey. Harrisburg, Jun­
ction city, Irving. Eugene
Notice of Final Settlement.
AB«IVB.
LIAVI.
Roseburg... 5 :40 pm
Portland . 8:00 a ni Rosebui
Roseburg. 6 :20 a m l Portland
- ------ . . 4:00 p ni
Notice
is
be
eby
given
that
the
under
­
Price Ranges $50 up. For full particulars apply to
Alban, Lacal, Dally. Eiespt SusSs,.
signed administrator of the estate of James
Ai Walker,deceased, has filed his final ac­
1.XAVB
AKRIVB.
J. I. KNIGHT 4 CO.,
THE INVESTMENT CO.,
count of his administration of said estate Portland 5: pm Albany....
49 Stark St, Portland, Or,
in the County Court of Yamhill C-onnty, Albany...... 5: a m Portland
Real Estate Agents, McMinnville.
F. BAKNEKOFF & CO..
Oregon, and said Court has set May 5. 18SH,
McMinnville Flouring Milla.
at the hour of one o’clock, p, m., of said Pullman Buffet Sleepers,
day, at the County Court room at McMinn­
Tourist Sleeping Cars,
ville, Oregon, as the time and place for
hearing said final account,
For accommodation of second class passen­
Therefore, all persons interested in said
gers attached to express trains
estate are hereby notified and required to
WEST SIOE DIVISION
appear at said time and place and show
Between Portland and Corvallis.
THE
cause, if any there be, why said estate l>e
not finally settled and said administrator
Mail Train Daily, except Sunday.
discharged,
ARRIVE
LBAVB
JOHN II WALKER,
Portland . 7:30 a m McMinn’ 10:10 am
Administrator of said estate.
10:10a in Corvallis. 12:10 p m
McMinn'
F. W. Fenton, Att’vfor estate.
2:56 p ni
Corvallis 12:55 p ni iMcMinn'
McMinn'. 2:56 p ni I Portland . 5:30 p ni
AND
Administratrix’ Notice.
At Albany and Corvallis connect with
In the County Court of tlic County of trains of Oregon Pacific.
Express Train Daily, except Sunday.
Yamhill, State of Oregon
LBAVB.
ARR1V«.
Ely’s Cream Ilalm is not a liquid, snuff or poeder. Applied into the nostrils it is In the matter of the estate )
Portland. 4:40 p m ’McMnn ..7.25pm
_ quickly'absorbed. It cleanses the head, allays inflammation, heals _ —
Edwin II. Fellows, deceasedi
McMinn’. . 5:45• m|Portland. 8:20am
JoSsi’i the sores. Sold by druggists or sent by mail on receipt of price. LII m
NOTICE is hereby given that the under­
signed has been by an order of the County
Court of the County of Yamhill, State of
Oregon, duly appointed administratrix of
EAST AND SOUTH.
the estate of Edwin B Fellows, deceased.
For tickets and full information regard­
Therefore, all persons having claims
against said estate arc hereby notified and ing rates, maps, etc., call on theCompany'a
required to present the same to me dulv agent at McMinnville
verified at my residence at McMinnville. li KOEHLER.
E. P. ROGERS,
Yamhill County, Oregon, within six months
Manager.
Asst. G F. & P Agt
from the date hereof.
Dated this Sth day of April, A D. 1891.
ELVIRA D. FELLOWS,
THE YAQUINA ROUTE
Administratrix of said estate.
F. W. Fenton. Attorney for estate.
15
W¡S
C old - head
dl’C
ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street NEV* YORK.
UUC
Through Tickets to all Points
Notice of Appointment of Executrix
B. B. BLOOD,
Of Carlton, Oreg-on, ixas tire
ONLY MACHINE
SHOP
This side of Portland.
Wood and Iron Lathe, Band Saw and Emery Outfit
For saw Gumming and other work.
•2K.11 Ixind-s ©f Elo.clusxxxixxg’ a-xxcl TX7"ocd. ’^TsT'crlx: ZDcxxc.
CYLINDER TEETH'MADE AND LAYED.
Send in your Machinery Early, so you can have it ready for harvest.
^.11 ■\XTcrlr ■\X7’arranted..
3c'
In the County Court of the County of Yam­
hill, State of Oregon.
In the matter of the estate j
of
. t
William C. Mason, dee’d. )
' NOTICE is hereby given that the under­
signed, Sarah B. Mason, has been, by an
order of the County Court of Yamhill coun­
ty, Oregon, duly appointed Executrix of the
estate of William C, Mason, deceased, with
22M Miles Shorter—20 hours le««
Will annexed
Therefore, all persons having claims
time than by any other route.
against said estate are hereby notified and
required to present the same, duly verified
SWFirst class through passenger and freight
to the undersigned at her residence at Mc­ line from Portland and all points in the Wit
Minnville. Yamhill county, Oregon, within lamette valley to and from San Francisco.
six months from the date hereof
Dated this4th dav of March, 1X0.
Time Scltetlulc (except Sundays).
SARAH B, MASON,
F. W. Fenton.
Executrix of said estate LeaveAlbanvl2:20 pmlljeave Yaquina 7 am
Att’y for Estate.
with Will annexed.
" Jorvalis 1:08 pm “ CorvaUslO:35 am
Arr'vS'aqiiinnl :35pm ArrivAlbanyll :13aui
OREGON DEVELOPMEN COM
PANJ'S STEAMSHIP LINE.
/ LITTLE
'AGENCYJot
LIVER
PILLS.
Omaha, Kansas City, Chicago,
ST PAUL,
DO NOT CRIPE, SICKEN OR
CONSTIPATE.
ST. LOUIS.
East, North
South.
---- A.T----
O. AtC. trains connect at Albany and Cor­
vallis.
The above trains connect at Yaqi ixA with
the Oregon Developement Co’s. Line of Steam­
ships between Yaquina and San Francisco.
N. B.—Passengers from Portland and all Wil-
amette Valley Points can make close connec
tlon with the’ trains of the Y aqvisa Itoi va at
Albany or Corvallis, and it destined to San
Francieeo, should arrange to arrive at Yaquina
the evening before date of sailing.
Sailing Dates.
The Steamer Willamette Valley will »all
FUOM TAQt'INA.
FROM BAN rRANCIBCO
January 23d,
January 19tb,
“
31st.
“
27th.
S um Cure for S ic « H i » d » c * i ,
AND ALL POINTS
oie.,
GEO. S. TAYLOR’ Ticket Agt
Corner First and Oak Sts.
ft ft ft ft A YEA R ! I undertake to briefly
W* J I I I I 11 teach any fait ly intellig.-nt p. rxmi of eith. r
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ inex, who can rend and write, and who,
!!!■■ I ■ 11 ■1"^' r instruction, will work iuduBtriouf.lv,
yiP 7P RR RR W how to earn Three Thousand Dollar»
Year In their own localitleg.whercver they live.I will also furninh
the situation or employment,at which you can earn that amount.
No money for me unless successful as above. Easily and quickly
learned. I desire but one worker from each district or county. I
have already taught and provided with employment a large
number, who are making over fflOOO a year each. It's Jk’EW
and »01.11>. Full particulars FKEE. Address at once,
E. C, ALLEft, Box <80, Auguslu, Maine,
y
and all trouble« arising frord
Indigestion er Constipation.
Improves the Complexion
by Purifying the Blood.
The dose can be nicely adjusted to suit the caee, as
ono pill can never be too large a doee. Easy to take
as so much sugar. 42 pills put up in a strong vial
which cap be carried in vest pocket. A Qr««t Coates«
lesee to Traveler« aad R ui I bom >»«. None Qesslao with­
out “Creaeent” Trade Bark. Bold Everywhere, the. a bottle»
Banpie Do«* aad Dreaaa Hook for Bo. In «lamps.
A DR. HARTER’S IRON TONIO. k
g
PURIFIES the nLOOD; REGULATE« the I.IVERB
■ sad KIDNEYS and RESTORES the DEBIMTATKDV
Pa»»ei ger and freight rates always the low
eat. Fo- information, apply to
C. C. HOGUE,
Gen'l. Frt. A Pass. Agt., Oregon Pacific R. "
Co., Corvallis, Oregon.
W B WEBSTER
Gen'l. Frt. A Pass, Agt., Oregon Development
Oo^ Montgomery street San Francisco. Cal.
4 to UKAJ.TH nud VIGOROUS STRENGTH ofYoumF
THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO. ST. LOUIS. MS
Lino aimction !
from Terminal or Interior Points flu
Northern Pacilic
Railroad
is the Line to Take
WASHING
COUN
Y.
To all Points East & South
r
«
i
It Is the DINING CAR ROUTE. It runs
Through VESTIBULE!) TRAINS
Every Day in lhe Year to
N orth « amhi CL.
I
i
ST. PAUL ANO CHICAGO
I
/
£
(No Change of Cars;
/'
5
%
A.
»
ComiHised of DINING CARS
•
t
I
i ë
T"
vtfÿ ■ ’
WHITESOH
M c M innville
OREGON*
COUNT
YAMHILL"
A Live Town, where Industries
are being Established for
All Seeking Employ
ment.
Lots, Finest Fruit and
Garden Lands, Near
Large Cannery,
SOLD IN SMALL TRACTS,
ON EASY TERMS.
J. B. ROHR,
Homes fitted up in the Neatest ami Most
Artistic Style.
Designs furnished for Decorations.
Southern Pacific Route
Roseburg Mall Daily.
Farmer Little, of Ohio, begun sneezing
the other day and couldn’t stop, nor could
the doctors do anything for him. The
hired man hauled off and hit him on the
proboscis and the sneezing disappeared ns
the;blood came. The sneezer was grate­
ful, of course, but he’s going to lick the
hire«! man some day this spring.—Detroit
Free Press.
House, Sign, and Ornamental Painter
NOTICE is hereby given (lint the under*
signed Charles Kloucheck ha« been b.v the
county court of Yamhill county, Oregon,
duly appointed administrator of the estate
of Josephine Kloucheck, deceased.
Therefore, all periona having claims
against said estate arc hereby notified and
required to present their claims to me duly
verified at tne law office of J. E. Magers, at
McMinnville, Oregon within six months
from the date hereof,
Dated this 11th day of February, 1*01.
C haw K ixmchxck .
Administrator for estate,
J, E. Magers and F, VV. Fenton, Attys.
Before Too Late.
Andalusian Enthusiasm.
If African women are to be transported
to Granada to fitly adorn these ancient
ruins, the native Andalusian damsel would
vie with them for the right, for the Anda­
lusian is a far more beautiful gem, and
worthy of being bom in the shadow of the
Alhambra or the Alcazar.
Her form is soft and flexible, the quint­
essence of the word “pliant” applied to
her. She crouches in the smallest corner;
she robs the sharpest angle of its sharp­
ness by sliding stealthily around it; she
winds her supple body through the narrow­
est crevice. Her senses partake daintily of
what may be offered to them. Her nose
lingers but a moment above the fragrant
chalice of the rose; her lips sip but a single
drop from the fiery malaga and reject the
rest.
Her most powerful sense, insatiable, yet
held in check by her, and holding others
within its wondrous ban, is her large,
beautiful eye. In the midst of the snowy
splendor of her faco this strange, black
flame is the confession of the extremes
which unite in her breast.—Chicago Globe.
East and South
m
COUNTY
Frnit Land Co. Whiteson, Or.
Railroad Center of the West Willamette Counties!
IT IS NOW SETTLED THAT
W II I T E S O N !
IS
(unsurpassed)
ITLIM AM HR A WING ROOM SLEEPERS
(Of Latest Equipment,)
TOl RIST SLEEPING CARS
Best that can be constructed and in
which accommodations are for hol­
ders of First or Hecond-c|itss Tick­
ets. and
ELEGANT BAY COACHES.
A Continuous Line connecting with all
lines, affordiug direct ana unin­
terrupted service.
Pullman Sleeper reservations can be secur
ed in advance through auy agent of th« road
TlirillPll TirLt’Is To and from all Points
lllivugll lirkPINi,, America, England
Bn<l Europe can lie purchased at any ticket
office of tins conniany.
Full information concerning rates, time
of trains, routes and other detoils furnished
on application to anv agent, or
A D CHARLTON.
Asst General Passenger Agent.
<>IBee Of the Compee, , No, 111
r Irst St., Cor. Wahlugtou, I’ortand, Or
ARE YOU GOING EAST!
If eo be sure and call for your tickets
via the
TO BE THE RAILROAD CENTER
Of the West Side Counties, And
Is to be Pushed to the Front!
Ilia positively the phorteat and fl
line to Chicago and th« east and gotitb
the only sleeping »fid dining car through
line to
Omaha,
One of I lie Largest and Best Equipped Fruit Canneries on
the Coast will lie Built at Once!
(In Time for the Coming Crop, if Possible.)
WILL PROBABLY EMPLOY 500 HANDS.
OTHER INDUSTRIES WILL FOLLOW.
Kansas City, and all
River Point.
Missouri
Ita magnificent steel
train tertice and e
deeping can has hont
dtie of
The IRoyal Route
Jthers may imi tate, but none can surpass it
Out Mòtto is "alwïyi Qfl tlffit
Wmhlngto
Don't Delay; Value of Town Lots will Doubl e in 60 Days
ENERGETIC TOWN BUILDERS WANTED.
NO MOSSBACKS NEED APPLY !
THE BEST
Illutratod, Descriptive and Pnced
THERE IS MONEY FOR THOSE WHO COME EARLY!
It lias permanently cured thovsaxds
of cases pronounced by doctors hope­
less. If you have premonitory symp­
toms, such as Cough, Difficulty of
Breathing, <tc., don’t delav, but' uso
PISO'S CURE fob CONSUMPTION
immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents.
Regarding Town Lots and ChoiceF ruit Lands, Address.
Agents.
FRUIT LAND CO., Whiteson, Oregon.
R. B. DICKINSON. 215 Sansome street, San Francisco. A. L. GORTNER. Portland, Or.
S eed A nnual
For 1891 will be mailed FREE
all applicants, and to last season*
customers. It is better than ever
Every person using Gardtn
Flaiver or Field See de,
should send for it Address
D. M . FERRY & CO.
DETROIT, MICM.
Largest Seedsmen in the world
/